Wildlands
Don’t Exist There
by Tod Bacigalupi
When we go to places like the Himalayas in Nepal or the
Andes in Ecuador, we believe we’ll see wild places. Huge mountains, places of great beauty and
maybe a snow leopard or a spectacled bear.
I’ve seen the beauty, but not the predators or the wild.
I’ve been lucky to have been in Nepal and in Ecuador
during the last year, and the thing that stands out most to me is that
wildlands don’t exist there. Representative of the majority of second and third
world countries, both have incredible mountains, glaciers, and high peaks.
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| Crystal Mountain from monastery, Nepal |
But wildlands as we understand them in the United
States don’t exist. Wild open spaces
where predators and prey interact in a mostly natural way don’t exist. The only areas of either country without
people are those areas where there can’t be farming or habitation. In other words, rock and ice. The big predators are virtually gone from
both countries, and neither has a concept of a land ethic.
For more than a millennium the Andes have been occupied
by indigenous peoples who farmed and grazed to elevations just shy of 15,000
feet. The Incas constructed roads from
Argentina to Ecuador and Columbia and mined the land for its gold and precious
metals. Before them the Cañari acted
similarly.
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| Inca road paved with stone, Ecuador |
Where there is agriculture, including the domestication
of grazing animals, there follows a natural response to predators -- getting
rid of them. The descendants of the
Incas and the Cañari retain the same response: predators are bad, and must be
eliminated for survival. So now cattle
graze at 14-15,000 feet. In the
Himalayas, it’s goats and yak that graze to 17,000 feet, but the attitude is
the same, no predators allowed.
The National Parks in Nepal are little different from
the rest of Nepal; they are occupied by people living in large and small
villages. The largest villages end
around 14,000 feet, but villages can be found at from 15,000 to 17,000 feet. Thus lands that could be wild are occupied.
The fact that the snow leopard is protected means little to the people whose
goats are prey. The predators in Nepal are virtually gone, along with the wild
intact ecosystem.
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| The school at Chakra Bhot, Nepal |
The idea of a land ethic is important. Aldo Leopold proposed the idea that the land
as a whole should be treated with respect. The land ethic was a natural
extension of ancient Greek and later European philosophy to extend the right of
existence to the land. In the United
States this now means “leave no trace” allowing the land to remain undisturbed
in every way. Wilderness areas exemplify
this idea. Where a core reserve is
surrounded by a buffer, and connected to other core reserves, the wild can
flourish, even expand.
Our concept of wilderness protection is foreign (no pun
intended) to the Ecuadorian or Nepali.
Indeed only rich foreigners could come up with such a bizarre idea. For these developing nations, the land only
has a value when it is used, and may even be abused when not used.
Nepal presents the starkest contrast between the US and
the third world in treatment of “wildlands.”
Yarsagumba is a caterpillar that dies underground. The Chinese believe it to be a miracle cure
for any number of ills. During Yarsagumba season, thousands of people migrate
to the land between 12,000 and 14,000 feet to dig for the valuable insect. On one trail, in two days, we passed
multitudes of men, women, children all in search of “gold” in the form of
caterpillars. And all without even the
most basic idea of taking care of the land. From simple food wrappers to feces;
the trail was covered in waste. In only
two days every possible piece of wood had been cut for warmth and the area was
stripped. This was only the first two days of the Yarsagumba season in the
Shey/Poksundo National Park.
There is no
land ethic
The same tearing up and messing up was going on at
Annapurna and throughout Nepal, representative of an idea that the land has no
value, i.e. the absence of a land ethic.
A friend from Ecuador came to visit me in Colorado, and
when we hiked Collegiate Peaks Wilderness, she was amazed by how pristine the
land was, and how little the evidence of human intrusion. She saw no litter, no trash. Leave no trace was a reality. For her, this was culture shock.
Almost by definition only rich countries can have a
land ethic. Only rich countries can afford to let the land be. The similarity
between Nepal and Ecuador is striking, and for the environmentalist, sad. Despite their natural beauty, the ecosystems
are no longer intact, and the possibility of restoration is slim. The villager
in the Himalayas must subsist, and the Ecuadorian peasant is little
different. Only tamed land allows
survival.
Have we
accomplished anything?
Dreaming of wildlands for all species, before my
travels in Nepal and Ecuador, I wasn’t sure US environmentalists had
accomplished much. I was discouraged by
our political climate; the push for natural gas, the potential opening of ANWR,
and the lack of money for environmental causes due to the recession. I watched Wild Connections struggling to
survive in hard economic times, and wondered, “Is it worth the effort?” I wondered if we had accomplished
anything.
But in Ecuador, National Parks are created at the whim
of national leaders, and then sold to the oil companies. In Nepal, the National Parks are created for
the tourist and for the money they bring.
In no case are the National Parks created for the species that dwell
there.
Unique in
the world
So every bit of land preserved in the United States as
wilderness, wilderness study area, roadless or just non-motorized sector is a
unique feature in the world. All of the
care we take with our wild areas and the species that live there is also unique. We are lucky as a highly industrialized
society that can afford to protect the wild, and do so not because the land is
more valuable left alone, but do so because the land has value as it is.



2 comments:
What are your thoughts on Tod's experiences and conclusions?
National Park for Sale. Yasuni National Park and indigenous tribal areas in Ecuador are threatened by oil drilling. See National Geographic Story at http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/01/yasuni-national-park/wallace-text
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